Christ in Alabama (and Tennessee and Georgia)

Paul and I just finished our tour of the South (thank
goodness for nice weather in Atlanta, Memphis, Nashville, and Birmingham).
Along the way we met up with good old friends, made new ones, and heard so many
stories of Jesus and race in America (and the world) that we could almost write
another book. The highlights, for me, were meeting several friends of the four
little girls who were killed in the 1963 Birmingham church bombing and hearing
their tales of dealing with loss, fear, and imagery of Christ.

"Christ in Alabama"

I wanted to draw brief attention to four of our hosts in
part to thank them, but also to let blog readers know about their dynamic and
fascinating work.

At Morehouse College, Reverend Matthew V. Johnson helped
coordinate our discussions with several classes and the chaplaincy program. Dr.
Johnson is a
graduate of Morehouse College and earned his Masters and Ph.D. degrees in
Philosophical Theology from the University of Chicago. He has done
post-graduate studies in Psychoanalysis and is currently a member in training
at the Institute of Contemporary Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. In the
ministry for thirty years, Dr. Johnson is the Pastor of Church of the Good
Shepherd-Baptist and serves as the National Executive Director of Every Church
A Peace Church. A novelist and a radio host as well, Professor Johnson’s
first scholarly book, The Tragic Vision of African American Religion is a beautiful study of how African Americans
experience, deal with, conceive, and interact with tragedy and the tragic.
Thanks to Dr. Johnson, little E.Z. now has a “future Morehouse man” which my
son will wear with pride (at least I’ll feel pride).

At Vanderbilt
University, Dr. Paul Lim was a remarkably gracious host. He is a historian of early modern and early
Enlightenment England, focusing on religious and intellectual changes which
manifested aslongue durée consequences
of Europe’s Reformations. He has published three books in this area; most
recently,Mystery Unveiled: the Crisis of
the Trinity in Early Modern England(Oxford, 2012);The Cambridge Companion to Puritanism(Cambridge, 2008);
andIn Pursuit of Purity, Unity, and Liberty:
Richard Baxter’s Puritan Ecclesiology in Context (Brill, 2004). Look out this
upcoming AHA/ASCH. There will be a special panel on his Mystery Unveiled, which I wouldn’t miss for the world. Also,
because of his wonderful discussion points on Asian American history, RiAH is
putting together a forum on “Asian Americans and the Color of Christ.”

Then at Memphis
Theological Seminary, Dr. Andre Johnson, who is the Dr. James L. Netters
Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Rleigion and African American Studies, and
the author of a wonderful new book on the prophetic oratory and performance of
Bishop Henry McNeal Turner, hosted a discussion with us. Dr. Johnson is also
the editor of the new blog, Race, Rhetoric, and Religion, which is one of the
fast-growing blogs in American religious history over the past year. In many
ways, he is becoming the online Paul Harvey of African American religious history.

Finally, there
was Dennis C. Dickerson of Vanderbilt University, the James M. Lawson, Jr.
Professor of History. Meeting with his graduate course was a particular joy.
Discussing Billy Graham, Reinhold Niebuhr, James Cone, and others on the Color
of Christ, we got into discussions of region, theology, denomination, academic
positioning, and change over time. Dr. Dickerson specializes in American Labor
History, the History of the U. S. civil rights movement, and African American
religious history. He also is interested in the social history of American
medicine and Wesleyan Studies. He has writtenOut of the Crucible: Black
Steel Workers in Western Pennsylvania, 1875-1980 (Albany, State University of New York
Press, 1986) which chronicles the failed century long struggle of black steel
laborers to attain occupational parity with their Caucasian counterparts. He
also wroteMilitant Mediator: Whitney M.
Young, Jr. (Lexington, University Press of
Kentucky, 1998) which analyzes the leadership of a major leader in the U. S.
civil rights movement in the 1960s. This book was awarded the 1999
Distinguished Book from the National Conference of Black Political Scientists.
Dickerson's new book,African
American Preachers and Politics: The Careys of Chicago(Jackson, University Press of Mississippi, 2010)
examines the intersection between religion and politics in the careers of two
clergy/politicians during most of the 20th century.Dickerson also served as
Historiographer of the African Methodist Episcopal Church from 1988 to 2012.

Thank you to our
hosts, the students, administrators, and all others who helped. Upstate New
York, see you in a month.